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sprkymrk wrote: If budget is what drives your decision then we can't be much help. I will say though that real servers use SCSI (sorry Seuss, no offence ). SCSI controllers typically have their own CPU and memory. They are not only faster, but less prone to errors. You get more than extra speed with SCSI drives, which is why they are so expensive. Additionally, you can always upgrade the onboard memory of the SCSI controller to increase performance as well. If speed and price are all you are interested in, then SATA will give you more bang for the buck.
albanga wrote: Gee awesome response! Thankyou everyone for joining the debate if thats what you want to call it. So it seems SCSI is the popular choice! Thats funny cos our supplier just told us to go with SATA. Which is strange cos he will lose money on it. !
RussS wrote: After putting several servers with SATA RAID in small businesses (10 users or less) I have distinct thoughts on this. SCSI for any servers I build for business that are running 2003 Small Buisness - doesn't matter what size the place is. SCSI for any business that really needs high availability. SCSI for any server where performance is needed. SCSI for any server used in my own organisation. SCSI for any server that will be running exchange. SCSI for any Terminal Server ............... Basically I will only use SATA for a home server or for a client ONLY wanting file and print sharing.
Plantwiz wrote: Congratulations! Now the million dollar question....which brand did you select? I'd vote for Seagate (FWIW) (now that Maxtor is w/ Seagate...and Seagate has a good track record anyway).
garv221 wrote: SCSI in a server is not expensive, it's a price you must pay to have a reliable server and infrastructure. Anything below SCSI is just cheap in quality and below industry standard for servers. The cost is just a drop in the bucket when considering how valuable data can be. As far as hard drives I agree with Plantwiz. Xeon is a must, I run only Seagate, I always run a raid 5 and have gold 4hr 24/7 support from Dell with a tech install on every server I manage. Look into the Dell Power Edge servers. Never had issues with them, I run the 6850's,2600's, power vault and 1950's. You can always add more space on a secondary controller.http://www.dell.com/content/products/category.aspx/servers?c=us&cs=555&l=en&s=biz
garv221 wrote: SCSI in a server is not expensive, it's a price you must pay to have a reliable server and infrastructure. Anything below SCSI is just cheap in quality and below industry standard for servers.
jdmurray wrote: garv221 wrote: SCSI in a server is not expensive, it's a price you must pay to have a reliable server and infrastructure. Anything below SCSI is just cheap in quality and below industry standard for servers. This is a myth perpetuated by the hard disk industry to justify inflated prices for SCSI technology. Disk size and age have more to do with drive reliability than its interface technology. For example, an 80GB SCSI drive is no more reliable than an 80GB SATA drive of the same age, and SCSI drives are not manufactured with better tolerances or materials than are found in 10K SATA drives.
sprkymrk wrote: FWIW the stuff I have read shows the Mean Time Between Failures for SCSI drives is about 15 years, while the MTBF for SATA is closer to 6 years.
sprkymrk wrote: However it is also notable that most SATA drives come with a one year warranty, while many SCSI drives will come with a 3-5 year warranty.
sprkymrk wrote: Another point in favor of SCSI is the ability to use up to 16 devices per channel. I have yet to see a computer/server with more than 4 SATA ports. If you want a nice RAID setup a minimum of 5-6 drives is mandatory IMO.
TechJunky wrote: Can you get hotswappable SATA Drives? Hotswappable technology with SCSI has been around Forever... Just another thing to think about.
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